S & K Sales Co. v. Nike, Inc.

816 F.2d 843, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 5275
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 6, 1987
Docket745, Docket 86-7949
StatusPublished
Cited by105 cases

This text of 816 F.2d 843 (S & K Sales Co. v. Nike, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S & K Sales Co. v. Nike, Inc., 816 F.2d 843, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 5275 (2d Cir. 1987).

Opinion

OAKES, Circuit Judge:

In this diversity action Nike, Inc., appeals from a judgment entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Robert J. Ward, Judge, following a jury trial in which Nike was found liable to S & K Sales Co. (“S & K”) for either participating in or knowingly accepting the benefits of a breach of fiduciary duty owed to S & K by a former employee, Norman Johnson. The jury awarded S & K $1,050,000 in compensatory damages and $5,000 in punitive damages. Judge Ward subsequently denied Nike’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and Nike filed a timely notice of appeal. We affirm.

S & K, a California corporation with its principal place of business in Greenwich, Connecticut, represents some eighty clients in the sale of consumer products to military exchanges. Through its approximately one hundred salaried salespeople located world *845 wide, S & K sells both “hard goods,” such as electronics, housewares, and food, and “soft goods,” primarily apparel and footwear, to military exchanges or commissaries where they are purchased by present and retired American servicemen and their families. S & K’s revenues, consisting primarily of commissions from its clients, totalled $9,524,000 in the fiscal year ended June 30,1984, only $2,000 more than in the previous fiscal year.

Nike, Inc., formerly known as Blue Ribbon Sports, is an Oregon corporation with its principal place of business in Beaverton, Oregon. A well-known manufacturer of athletic footwear and apparel, Nike sells its goods to wholesalers and retailers both directly and through sales representatives. In fiscal year 1984, Nike employed approximately 4,000 people, and had domestic sales in excess of $700 million.

In September 1975, S & K hired Norman Johnson, a former employee, to head S & K’s Haviland Fashions division (“Haviland”), which was being established to specialize in the sale of soft goods. As early as March 1978, Johnson wrote to Nike to solicit its business for Haviland. On August 31, 1978, Nike and Haviland entered into an agreement under which Haviland was to represent Nike in sales to the military market in the eastern United States. When Richard Steinberg, owner and president of S & K, learned of this contract, he instructed Johnson to terminate it because of a conflict Steinberg perceived in Haviland’s representing both Nike and Wilson Sporting Goods (“Wilson”), an established client. Johnson accordingly informed Nike of Steinberg’s decision, and in a letter to Steinberg dated October 11,1978, Nike terminated its contract with Haviland.

Several weeks after Steinberg’s decision, Johnson himself called Nike to state that in his opinion it was a mistake for Haviland to have turned down Nike’s business. He proposed that he individually should act as Nike’s sales representative using employees not connected with Haviland. Nike agreed, and on October 1, 1978, ten days before its contract with Haviland was formally terminated, entered into a sales representative agreement with Johnson that was identical to the previous contract with Haviland. Neither Johnson nor Nike ever made this agreement known to S & K or Haviland, and subsequent to the agreement Johnson ceased all sales efforts on behalf of Wilson even though Wilson continued as an S & K client. Nike’s commission checks were made payable to and were cashed by Johnson individually until June 1980. 1

In December 1979, Wilson ended its relationship with S & K and Steinberg asked Johnson to try to get the Nike account back. Johnson, without disclosing the existence of his agreement with Nike, told Steinberg in March 1980 that he had managed to get the Nike account back but that Nike had refused to sign a written contract. Johnson then gave S & K a photocopy of two people shaking hands with the label, “Handshake Agreement with BRS, Inc. Nike Shoes. At this time BRS will not enter into a written agreement.” Johnson subsequently informed Nike that Wilson had been terminated and that Haviland staff would begin servicing Nike’s account. He later requested that Nike make its commission checks out to himself and Haviland jointly.

This arrangement continued through July 1981, when S & K reorganized its sales force to abandon Haviland’s specialization on soft good sales and instead to allow all sales personnel to sell both hard and soft goods. In the wake of this reorganization, and even though S & K had adjusted his compensation, Johnson approached Ladd Lonnquist, Nike’s national sales manager, and told him that he was considering leaving Haviland and proposed that Nike terminate S & K and appoint Johnson as the exclusive Nike agent to the military. At Lonnquist’s suggestion, on August 14,1981, Johnson sent Nike a “Personal & Confidential” proposal to this effect, stating that he was prepared to resign *846 from Haviland, start a separate agency, and “assume the responsibilities of a ‘Nike Head Rep.’ ” In this letter Johnson also estimated Nike’s future sales volume and suggested the possibility of hiring two Nike employees for his new Nike agency.

Johnson’s proposal was well received at Nike. In September 1981 Johnson met with a Nike national accounts manager, Kenya Strader, and gave her a draft of a letter addressed to Norman Johnson, as vice president of Haviland Fashions, terminating S & K as Nike’s representative. As he gave Strader the letter he explained that “he indeed was vice president of Haviland Fashions,” that he wanted to start his own agency, and that “this letter would make it easier for him if [Nike] terminated [its] relationship with Haviland Fashions in lieu of him resigning.” With Lonnquist’s approval, Strader then signed the letter without revision, dated it September 28, 1981, and sent it to Johnson. When he received this letter, Johnson told Steinberg that Haviland had been terminated because Nike wanted to use its own employees as representatives to the military market. Johnson indicated that he hoped to persuade Nike to reverse this decision, but at no point revealed that he himself had requested that Nike send the termination letter.

Johnson next met with Lonnquist in January 1982 after becoming concerned by Nike’s failure to take concrete action on his proposal. At this meeting they discussed the proposal, but Lonnquist balked at Johnson’s attempt to procure a higher rate of commission. Johnson then proposed that Nike sign him on as a Nike-exclusive head representative for all military sales, with support from Haviland employees. Lonnquist agreed to this, and on February 2, 1982, wrote to Johnson and enclosed a formal sales representative agreement (the “1982 Agreement”), which Johnson signed individually.

In the meantime, Johnson had told Stein-berg that he had gotten Nike back for S & K and that S & K would now handle Nike world-wide. Steinberg authorized Johnson to sign a contract with Nike on S & K’s behalf, and Johnson forwarded to Stein-berg a copy of Lonnquist’s February 2 letter and the signed agreement. Stein-berg objected to the facts that the agreement was in Johnson’s name only and that Nike’s commission checks were being made payable to Johnson. Johnson replied that Lonnquist felt “more comfortable” with Johnson’s name on the documents, but assured Steinberg that the names would be changed. These changes were never made.

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Bluebook (online)
816 F.2d 843, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 5275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-k-sales-co-v-nike-inc-ca2-1987.